Using Cold War tactics to crush dissent, Russia’s autocratic regime has systematically targeted opposition figures, critics and journalists for decades.


Moscow is known for deploying fearful tactics to eliminate its critics: from Leon Trotsky, the second most critical man of the communist Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, to Alexey Navalny, arguably the most powerful opposition leader who is Russian President Vladimir Putin's major foe. 

Apparently, Putin’s nemesis Navalny has been targeted by the nerve agent Novichok, a fatal poison. The incident once again reveals that Russia has not left behind its Cold War tactics of killing and assassinating dissidents in cold blood. 

Russia’s favourite assassination tool, which can bring a quick death to its victims if injected in the right dose, according to experts, was developed by its predecessor state, the communist Soviet Union in the 1970s and 1980s. 

That said, even an inadequate dose would lead to severe damage, experts say. 

"They will start convulsions, and stop breathing and then lose vision, and there are other problems — vomiting, everything. It's a terrible scene," explains Vil Mirzayanov, a chemist, who worked in the Soviet Union in the past. 

Russia is a signatory country to the Chemical Weapons Convention, which bans chemical weapons like Novichok. 

After lengthy discussions and negotiations in the wake of an international furore against Moscow, Russia has finally allowed the medical evacuation of its citizen, Navalny, to Germany, where he remains in a grave condition. 

"In 2020, poisoning Navalny with Novichok is exactly the same as leaving an autograph at the scene of the crime," wrote Leonid Volkov, Navalny's chief of staff, on Twitter before deleting it. Under his tweet post, he used a picture of Putin's signature. 

There have been many opponents targeted by Moscow - between Trotsky, a communist dissident to the then-Soviet Union President Joseph Stalin’s autocratic rule, who founded the Red Army, instrumental for the communist revolution as well as keeping the Soviet Union a superpower for decades, to Navalny, the most recent liberal opponent to Putin’s suppressive politics.

Esteban Volkov, Leon Trotsky's grandson, speaks about his grandfather in a room in the museum that was once both their homes in Mexico City June 8, 2005. Volkov spoke of his relationship with his grandfather, and the day he arrived home from school to find him dying from a pick axe wound to the head in 1940.
Esteban Volkov, Leon Trotsky's grandson, speaks about his grandfather in a room in the museum that was once both their homes in Mexico City June 8, 2005. Volkov spoke of his relationship with his grandfather, and the day he arrived home from school to find him dying from a pick axe wound to the head in 1940.
(Andrew Winning / Reuters Archive)

Poisoning or shooting 

In 2006, Alexander Litvinenko, a former member of the Federal Security Service (FSB), which is the main Russian intelligence organisation, replacing the notorious KGB, the Soviet predecessor of the FSB, drank tea in a London hotel (as Navalny did last month in an airport cafe in Siberia before taking a plane to Moscow). 

Immediately after this, Litvinenko - a critic of Putin, who also appeared to work for the British secret service, MI6, post defection to the UK from Russia in 2000, fell severely ill. Three weeks later, he died. 

Litvinenko was reportedly poisoned by polonium-210, a radioactive material, which included highly hazardous alpha particles. Later, a British investigation report concluded that Putin might have directly approved Litvinenko’s assassination. 

In this May 10, 2002 file photo, Alexander Litvinenko, former KGB spy is photographed at his home in London.
In this May 10, 2002 file photo, Alexander Litvinenko, former KGB spy is photographed at his home in London.
(AP Archive)

Before his poisoning, the Putin critic was working on several projects including the investigation of the assassination of Anna Politkovskaya, the Russian journalist, who was killed in her apartment just a month before Litvinenko’s poisoning. 

Politkovskaya was a prominent reporter and a critic of Russia’s brutal war in Chechnya, which had continued in different phases between 1994 and 2009, leading to tens of thousands of civilian casualties and at least 5,000 forced disappearances. 

The Russian journalist, who was also a critic of the Russian President, was receiving death threats before her assassination. According to a Russian court, her killers appear to be Chechen-origin Russian citizens. 

In 2015, Boris Nemtsov, a former deputy prime minister and a prominent liberal opposition figure, was also assassinated near the Kremlin in Moscow. A Russian court found Chechen-origin suspects as guilty of the Nemtsov’s murder. But it’s still not known who hired them to kill him. 

Before the assassination, Nemtsov expressed his fears over Putin's 'plans to kill him' over his opposition to the war in Ukraine. 

A woman places flowers before a portrait of slain Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, in Moscow, in this file photo dated Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2009.
A woman places flowers before a portrait of slain Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, in Moscow, in this file photo dated Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2009.
(Pavel Golovkin / AP Archive)

Chechen leaders killed by Russia

Since the 1990s, Russia has deliberately targeted Chechen pro-independence leaders, killing several high-ranking political figures, which included Dzhokhar Dudayev, Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, Aslan Maskhadov and Abdul-Halim Sadulayev, who had served as the presidents of the unrecognised Chechen Republic of Ichkeria. 

Dudayev was a former Soviet air force general, who was killed by Russian air force in Chechnya in 1996. Yandarbiyev was killed in Doha, the Qatari capital, in 2004 by the operators of Russian intelligence.

Currently, Chechnya is led by a pro-Russia Chechen leadership, whose problematic political conduct has been widely criticised. 

February 1996 file photo of Chechen leader Dzhokhar Dudayev somewhere in eastern Chechnya.
February 1996 file photo of Chechen leader Dzhokhar Dudayev somewhere in eastern Chechnya.
(AP Archive)

Some have survived

Despite Russia’s effective targeting of its dissidents under Putin, there are some lucky survivors. 

In March 2018, Sergei Skripal, a former Russian spy, who also worked for MI6, was also poisoned by the same agent of Novichok, which has been allegedly used against Navalny in the UK. His daughter Yulia was also targeted in the same plot. 

Two months later, the father and daughter were discharged from hospital, recovering from the poisoning. 

Then-British Prime Minister, Theresa May, said that it was “highly likely” that Russia was behind the poisoning of the Skripals. 

Russia rejected any connection with the Skripals, just like it refuses to have any ties with the recent Navalny poisoning. 

Viktor Yushchenko, a former Ukranian president, who was a fierce critic of Russia, also claimed that he was poisoned with dioxin, a toxic chemical, by Moscow in 2004. 

Yushchenko lives but with a stark disfigurement on his face. Source: trtworld.com